May 2024: All the best things to stream (or see in cinemas) this month
May 2024: All the best things to stream (or see in cinemas) this month

Sarah Finnan

We meet the makers, creators, producers and chefs who are the driving force behind Co Clare’s flourishing creative scene
We meet the makers, creators, producers and chefs who are the driving force behind Co...

Michelle Hanley

Striped trousers: Summer’s take on comfortable loungewear
Striped trousers: Summer’s take on comfortable loungewear

Sarah Finnan

Join our event ‘Future Proof: Health, Wealth and Fulfilment’ in Cork city
Join our event ‘Future Proof: Health, Wealth and Fulfilment’ in Cork city

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Networking Event: ‘Future Proof: Health, Wealth and Fulfilment’ in Cork city
Networking Event: ‘Future Proof: Health, Wealth and Fulfilment’ in Cork city

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Charlotte Tilbury’s new perfumes want you to feel good
Charlotte Tilbury’s new perfumes want you to feel good

Holly O'Neill

May Horoscopes: What your star sign has in store for you this month
May Horoscopes: What your star sign has in store for you this month

Clarisse Monahan

Business Club Member competition: WIN a €300 voucher for Maverick Soul Interiors
Business Club Member competition: WIN a €300 voucher for Maverick Soul Interiors

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All Together Now’s festival food coordinator Vanessa Clarke on her life in food
All Together Now’s festival food coordinator Vanessa Clarke on her life in food

Sarah Gill

12 gripping Irish books to read this May
12 gripping Irish books to read this May

Sarah Finnan

Image / Editorial

Caitlin Moran Novel To Be Made Into A Film


By IMAGE
12th Nov 2014
Caitlin Moran Novel To Be Made Into A Film

caitlin moran portrait

It’s no secret that we are more than a little obsessed with the wonderful Caitlin Moran.

We also couldn’t be more delighted to hear the news this morning that her not-so-fictional first novel has been selected for a film adaptation by Monumental Pictures and Film4.

How to Build a Girl centers on a young girl who moves to London in an attempt to make it as a music critic away from her family in Wolverhampton. The narrator, Johanna Morrigan, is a fat, working class girl from a large family, who gets a job aged 16 at a music magazine, wears black, sleeps around, gets cystitis, and re-names herself.

caitlin moran

Caitlin Moran (whose father is Irish by the way) astoundingly wrote the book in six months while doing the day job (columnist with The Times) and tirelessly juggling motherhood.

And now, our favourite feminist is set to have her first novel hit the silver screen and we’ll be counting down until it hits Irish screens.

So, who’s buying the popcorn?

Follow her fab Twitter feed here: @CaitlinMoran

Hannah Popham @HannahPopham